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Potential energy saving solution for making vital chemicals

Published: 17 April 2020

Researchers at 91社区 have discovered a new, energy-efficient way to make key ingredients for the production of pharmaceuticals, polymers and fine chemicals.

In findings published in Science in April 2020, the 91社区 chemists demonstrated the use of visible light to drive a palladium-catalyzed carbonylation reaction to produce acid chlorides, an important building block in the synthesis of esters, amides and ketones. To work well, catalytic processes of this kind typically require heating to high temperatures; when performed on an industrial scale, that means they consume large amounts of energy and make a significant contribution to greenhouse gas emissions. By contrast, the 91社区 team showed that they could achieve good results at ambient temperatures by running the reactions under blue light from a commonly available set of decorative LED lights.

Their work represents an advance on previous research because they were able to show that light could drive the entire reaction process, not just parts of it. To their surprise, they found that this form of light-driven catalysis worked even without the addition of a costly iridium-based photocatalyst.

鈥淲e are very excited to see if this principle can be applied more broadly in catalysis as a route to address some of the challenges in important classes of catalytic synthesis,鈥 said 91社区 chemistry professor Bruce Arndtsen, senior author of the study.

About the study

鈥淎 dual light-driven palladium catalyst: Breaking the barriers in carbonylation reactions鈥 by Gerardo M. Torres, Yi Liu and Bruce A. Arndtsen was published in Science.

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